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AskHistorians Podcast 126 -- AH Is Uncovering History with Dig - A History Podcast

The AskHistorians Podcast

Release Date: 12/07/2018

AskHistorians Podcast Episode 226 – The Ethiopian Revolution of 1974 with /u/thebigbosshimself show art AskHistorians Podcast Episode 226 – The Ethiopian Revolution of 1974 with /u/thebigbosshimself

The AskHistorians Podcast

EnclavedMicrostate (Jeremy) talks with /u/thebigbosshimself about the leadup to the 1974 Ethiopian Revolution, which saw the overthrow of the Solomonic dynasty and its replacement by the military junta known as the Derg. 53 mins.

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AskHistorians Podcast Episode 225 – Doing Naval History on Youtube with Drachinifel show art AskHistorians Podcast Episode 225 – Doing Naval History on Youtube with Drachinifel

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EnclavedMicrostate (Jeremy) and Lubyak (Chris) talk with Drachinifel about doing naval history on Youtube, covering the opportunities and challenges of Youtube as a platform for public history. Near the end is also a Q&A specifically on naval history topics. 59 mins.

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AskHistorians Podcast Episode 224: Conversation with Rebecca Clarren show art AskHistorians Podcast Episode 224: Conversation with Rebecca Clarren

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In this episode, Jenn Binis (EdHistory101) talks with Rebecca Clarren, Investigative Reporter, and author of THE COST OF FREE LAND: JEWS, LAKOTA AND AN AMERICAN INHERITANCE. The conversation explores her research process, the concept of intertwined histories, and the role of the author in such histories. 42 minutes.

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AskHistorians Podcast Episode 223: Equality: The History of an Elusive Idea with Darrin M. McMahon show art AskHistorians Podcast Episode 223: Equality: The History of an Elusive Idea with Darrin M. McMahon

The AskHistorians Podcast

In this episode, Jenn Binis (EdHistory101) talks with with Darrin M. McMahon about his book, EQUALITY: The History of an Elusive Idea. They discuss the difference between equity and equality, scholarship around the history of an idea, and the adventures of conducting research across multiple eras and places. 52 mins.

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AskHistorians Podcast Episode 222: The Sudbury Devil with Atun-Shei show art AskHistorians Podcast Episode 222: The Sudbury Devil with Atun-Shei

The AskHistorians Podcast

Steelcan909 talks with Andrew Rakich of Atun-Shei films about his new release, the Sudbury Devil.  The episode is split into a spoiler free section and a spoiler section.  Spoilers for the movie start at 30 minutes.  75 minutes.

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AskHistorians Podcast Episode 221: Historically Informed Performance with The Australian Haydn Ensemble show art AskHistorians Podcast Episode 221: Historically Informed Performance with The Australian Haydn Ensemble

The AskHistorians Podcast

Tyler Alderson talks with members of the Australian Haydn Ensemble about historical performance in classical music. From instruments to techniques, the ensemble aims to play the music of the 18th century the way that composers like Haydn and Mozart would have heard it. 39m

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AskHistorians Podcast Episode 220 - Crusades Historiography with James Currie show art AskHistorians Podcast Episode 220 - Crusades Historiography with James Currie

The AskHistorians Podcast

Steelcan909 talks with James Currie about the recent proliferation of books about the crusades written by conservative Catholic writers and their sympathizers.  Two books are examined for their ideaological dimensions and what they say about the crusades and their reception almost 1000 years after their events.  Warning signs for biased history books, inter-Catholic disputes, the relationship between Catholic "historians" and the Catholic Church, and alternative reading suggestions are discussed.  58min.

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AskHistorians Podcast Episode 219 – The Japanese-American Experience during and after the Second World War with Mitch Maki show art AskHistorians Podcast Episode 219 – The Japanese-American Experience during and after the Second World War with Mitch Maki

The AskHistorians Podcast

Jeremy Salkeld talks with Dr. Mitch Maki of the Go For Broke National Education Center about Japanese-American internment, the 442nd Infantry Regiment, and the Japanese-American campaign for redress and recognition in the postwar decades. Also discussed are relations between Hawaiian-born and continental-born Japanese-Americans, and the efforts of the Go For Broke center's efforts to promote awareness and bring about positive social change. 36 mins.

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AskHistorians Podcast Episode 218 - Public History in the 21st Century with Claire Aubin show art AskHistorians Podcast Episode 218 - Public History in the 21st Century with Claire Aubin

The AskHistorians Podcast

Morgan Lewin Campos chats with Dr Claire Aubin (@ceaubin on Twitter) about the challenges of studying fascism and violence in the current global political climate, as well as the problems sensationalistic and revisionistic historical writing creates for public history. (68 mins)

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AskHistorians Podcast Episode 217 - AskHistorians Podcast Episode 217 - "Say Anarcha" with J. C. Hallman

The AskHistorians Podcast

We're back! Jennifer Borgioli Binis (EdHistory101) talks with J. C. Hallman, author of "Say Anarcha: A Young Woman, a Devious Surgeon, and the Harrowing Birth of Modern Women's Health." Heads up that the episode talks about some of the experiences enslaved women had with J. Marion Sims, who had been long credited as "the father of gynocology." They discuss how Hallman approached the research as a non-historian, dynamics around identity, and the genre of speculative of non-fiction. The archive for the book is at: . 

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This week on the AskHistorians Podcast we managed to sit down with three of the wonderful women of @dig_history to talk history podcasting, #twitterstorians, Jill Lepore, What to Expect When You're A History-Loving Highschooler, what #history can learn from #librarylife and so much more!

Find Dig - A History Podcast here: https://digpodcast.org/

Historians joining us today:

*Averill Earls, PhD*

Averill is an historian of modern Ireland and sexuality, and writes about same-sex desiring men, policing, and Dublin’s queer urban spaces. She is an Assistant Professor of History at Mercyhurst University in Erie, PA, where she teaches everything except American History. In addition to making podcast episodes with the amazing women of Dig, she is the Assistant Layout Editor at Nursing Clio. She’s published a range of pieces on teaching, literature, and the history of gender and sexuality with collaborative history blogs like Notches and Nursing Clio. When she’s not teaching, podcasting, or moonlighting as a member of the Cabot Creamery Co-operative social media team, she enjoys board games, baking, and puppy snuggles. Averill tweets from @aearls.


*Sarah Handley-Cousins, PhD*

Sarah is an historian of disability and gender in the American Civil War. She is a Clinical Assistant Professor of History at the University at Buffalo. Her forthcoming book, to be published with the University of Georgia Press, is about disabled Union veterans during and after the Civil War. In addition to a PhD in History from the University at Buffalo, Sarah holds a BA from Wells College and an MSEd from Niagara University, and is an alum of the New York State Council for the Humanities Public Humanities Fellows. You can find her writing on Nursing Clio, where she is also an Editor, and various digital news outlets, including The Washington Post and The New York Times. She enjoys unresolved romantic tension (in books and movies), visiting the Gettysburg National Military Park, and heated blankets. Sarah tweets from @sarahbelle721.


*Marissa C. Rhodes*

Marissa is an independent information professional and PhD candidate in History at UB. Her dissertation tells the stories of lactating women for hire in the Atlantic world during the Revolutionary era. In addition to a BA in History from Niagara University, Marissa has an MLS from UB. She is a former fellow at APS, The Library Company/HSP & the Lapidus-Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture. But most importantly, she’s super into running, red wine, British television, and murder (as much as someone can be into murder without actually doing them). Marissa tweets from @iLURVhistory.

(and in spirit)

*Elizabeth Garner Masarik*

Elizabeth is an historian of the welfare state and women in Progressive Era America. She is currently completing her PhD in History at the University at Buffalo, working on her dissertation and teaching American History. Elizabeth holds a BA from the University of Texas at Austin and an MA from UB. She is a 2017-18 Fellow in the University at Buffalo Institute for the Research on Women and Gender and 2018-2019 Humanities Institute fellow. She was recently featured by the Texas Tribune as an authority on Mexican-American relations in the borderlands of Texas. She had a forthcoming article, “Por la Raza, Para la Raza: Jovita Idar and Progressive-era Mexicana Maternalism in the Texas-Mexican Border,” in the Southwestern Historical Quarterly . Somehow she also has time to be a savvy blogger, and a totally badass powerlifter. Elizabeth tweets from @EGMasarik.

 

© 2019 Brian M. Watson